Boston Herald

Group’s faith endures after Haiti kidnapping

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PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti — A U.S. religious organizati­on whose 17 members were kidnapped in Haiti asked supporters on Friday to pray and share stories with the victims’ families of how their faith helped them through difficult times as efforts to recover them entered a sixth day.

Ohio-based Christian Aid Ministries issued the statement a day after a video was released showing the leader of the 400 Mawozo gang threatenin­g to kill those abducted if his demands are not met. Haitian officials have said the gang is seeking $1 million ransom per person, although they said it wasn’t clear if that includes the five children in the group, the youngest being 8 months old.

“You may wonder why our workers chose to live in a difficult and dangerous context, despite the apparent risks,” the organizati­on said. “Before leaving for Haiti, our workers who are now being held hostage expressed a desire to faithfully serve God in Haiti.”

The FBI is helping Haitian authoritie­s recover the 16 Americans and one Canadian. A local human rights group said their Haitian driver also was kidnapped.

“Pray that their commitment to God could become even stronger during this difficult experience,” Christian Aid Ministries said.

At the White House on Friday, U.S. press secretary Jen Psaki sidesteppe­d questions about whether or not the Biden administra­tion would look to halt deportatio­ns of Haitians to their home country or consider adding a U.S. military presence on the ground in response to the missionari­es’ kidnapping­s.

“We are working around the clock to bring these people home,” she said. “They are U.S. citizens, and there has been targeting over the course of the last few years of U.S. citizens in Haiti and other countries too…for kidnapping for ransom. That is one of the reasons that the State Department issued the warning they did in August about the risk of kidnapping for ransom.”

Psaki spoke a day after a couple hundred protestors shut down one neighborho­od in Haiti’s capital to decry the country’s deepening insecurity and lack of fuel blamed on gangs, with some demanding the resignatio­n of Prime Minister Ariel Henry.

The streets of Port-au-Prince were largely quiet and empty on Friday, although hundreds of supporters of Jimmy Chérizier, leader of “G9 Family and Allies,” a federation of nine gangs, marched through the seaside slum of Cité Soleil.

“We are not involved in kidnapping. We will never be involved in kidnapping,” Chérizier, known as Barbecue, claimed during a speech to supporters.

As they marched, the supporters sang and chanted that G9 is not involved in kidnapping­s. Some of them were carrying high caliber automatic weapons.

“This is the way they are running the country,” Chérizier, who is implicated in several massacres, said as he pointed to trash lining the streets with his assault weapon.

 ?? AP ?? ‘WORKING AROUND THE CLOCK’: A child stands on the grounds of the Christian Aid Ministries headquarte­rs in Titanyen, Haiti, on Thursday.
AP ‘WORKING AROUND THE CLOCK’: A child stands on the grounds of the Christian Aid Ministries headquarte­rs in Titanyen, Haiti, on Thursday.

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